Faculty members participate in a variety of activities that contribute to communal scholarship and develop serviceable insight, all with an eye to equipping others to work effectively toward Christ-centered renewal in all aspects of contemporary life.
For works by faculty arranged by departments, please visit Faculty Work: By Department.
Submissions from 2000
Because the Unseen May Vanish, David Schelhaas, Poetry
Boy in the Wind, Mike Vanden Bosch, Book
Craft of Christian Teaching: A Classroom Journey, John Van Dyk, Book
Engaged Praxis and a Reformed Worldview: Response to Brian Walsh From a Student's Perspective, Emily Hutten, Response or Comment
Fire and Ice, Joanne Alberda, Artwork
Gambling on Faith: A Holistic Examination of Blaise Pascal's Wager, Jan van Vliet, Article
Global History or Western Civilization: A Symposium, Paul Otto, Feature Article
Green Eye of the Storm (Book Review), Russell W. Maatman, Book Review
"History Wars" -- "Holy Wars" or, History in Contention, Keith C. Sewell, Feature Article
Home in Alfalfa (Book Review), John Van Rys, Book Review
How Now Shall We Live (Book Review), Charles Veenstra, Book Review
How the News Makes Us Dumb: The Death of Wisdom in an Information Society (Book Review), Tim P. Vos, Book Review
Iced Magnolia, Joanne Alberda, Artwork
Jane Austen's Falling Women, Mary Dengler, Poetry
Logicion's Intuition II, Susan Van Geest, Artwork
Me Mo, Jake Van Wyk, Artwork
Moments, Susan Van Geest, Artwork
Narene, Mike Vanden Bosch, Poetry
Once, They Had Been Friends, James C. Schaap, Short Story
Prairie Smoke, Joanne Alberda, Artwork
Provocations: Spiritual Writings of Kierkegaard (Book Review), Charles C. Adams, Book Review
Reading at Dusk, David Schelhaas, Poetry
Regimes of Truth and the Rhetoric of Deceit -- From a Literary Perspective, John Van Rys, Response or Comment
Regimes of Truth and the Rhetoric of Deceit -- From a Philosophical Perspective, Mark Tazelaar, Response or Comment
Religion of Technology: The Divinity of Man and the Spirit of Invention and The Invisible Computer: Why Good Products Can Fail, the Personal Computer is So Complex, and Information Appliances are the Solution (Book Reviews), Charles C. Adams, Book Review